Primer: Strikeforce ‘Diaz vs. Noons II’

Nick
Diaz may dismiss his first fight with K.J.
Noons as the result of a trigger-happy doctor -- a physician
stopped the fight when Diaz was spurting blood from his brow -- but
the scene had a far more dramatic impact on his fight career than
he might let on. Or even realize.

It was after Noons carved up his face that Diaz consulted with
Frank Stile, MD, a Las Vegas-based plastic surgeon prepared to take
Diaz on as a kind of guinea pig for an experimental surgery that
might reduce a fighter’s chances of being cut open from too much
excess scar tissue. (That’s the usual result of getting bad stitch
work on site instead of heading for the hospital.) Stile dug out
the hamburger tissue, sewed in collagen, and figured the new skin
would protect Diaz from another anticlimactic ending.

Coincidence or not, Diaz is 7-0 since the Noons fight and the
surgery and his boxing has improved by leaps since the bout. After
a win over Yves Edwards,
Noons took nearly two years off MMA to pursue a pro boxing career
and looked sharp against Jorge
Gurgel. Far from being an overcooked rematch against two fading
athletes, Diaz and Noons are likely going to see the best of one
another Saturday.

Why You Should Care: Because Noons and Diaz have some of the
most effective and advanced boxing in MMA today, and you’ll see far
more of that from them than you would from a James Toney;
because Gesias “JZ”
Cavalcante has been one of the best lightweights working in
Japan and Josh Thomson
should provide a gauge for his status stateside; and because 12-0
Sarah
Kaufman will finally be getting a chance to defend her
135-pound women’s title -- and maybe even the entire worth of that
division -- on a main card.

Fight of the Night: Undoubtedly Diaz/Noons, the closest
thing we’ll ever get to John L. Sullivan’s days: a combination of
skill and nearly bare-knuckle fists.

Hype Quote of the Show: “[Noons] is fighting only stand-up
fighters, even like myself. He doesn't want to fight anyone who
just wants to take him down. If he fights a real serious wrestler,
he won't survive the way I can. If I get taken down you can't
finish me, but if he gets taken down you can just lay on him. I
mean, I'd imagine. I don't really know because I haven't seen him
do sh-t." -- Diaz, voicing the biggest concern over Noons’
potential in MMA, to MMAFighting.com.

Questions: Strikeforce: Diaz vs. Noons
II

Diaz or Noons -- who’s the better MMA boxer?

Often repeated but warranted: terrific pure boxing skills can’t be
dumped into a cage environment without radical alterations.
Footwork needs to be concerned with takedown attempts; attacks and
feints need to worry about elbows, knees, and kicks. The fact that
Noons might have better “pure” boxing than Diaz is only relevant if
they fought in the WBO.

We had an answer for this in late 2007, when the two met and Noons
turned Diaz into a bloody mess inside of a round. Three years
later, both men have only improved, but it’s been Diaz who has
racked up time in the cage, sometimes against bigger men like
Scott
Smith and Frank
Shamrock. Noons bounced between pro boxing and MMA, knocking
out less celebrated opponents. Diaz’s advantage is that he doesn’t
have to box worrying about threats of a takedown from Noons; Noons
faces an appreciably better fighter than he did three years ago.
Still, it’s going to be a striking match. And it’s not the level of
boxing that decides the fight, but how that boxing is applied.

Is Noons a poor sport?

As
Compustrike points out in their statistical breakdown of
Saturday’s card, Noons has accrued a rap sheet of infractions that
cast doubt on his sportsmanship: he clocked Jorge Gurgel
with a knee when Gurgel was on three points, kept punching Malik
Williams after the referee waved the fight, and launched late
hits against two fighters after the bell. (He also rushed Diaz’s
corner following their first fight, leading to a mini-mob scene,
footage Strikeforce is tastefully keeping to a minimum.) Whatever
Noons is able to accomplish in his career, he should be careful not
to temper it with questionable ring ethics.

Can Kaufman carry the women’s welterweight division?

File Photo

Sarah Kaufman

With Gina Carano
AWOL from fighting to pursue an acting career, the torch-bearer in
the still-fledging women’s movement in MMA is Cristiane
“Cyborg” Santos -- with tattoos and a vascular set of arms, the
anti-Carano in terms of femininity.

With no one able to match Santos’ tenacity at 145 pounds, the real
intrigue in the women’s side might be at 135: 12-0 champion Kaufman
defends her title against Marloes
Coenen in her first proper Strikeforce appearance Saturday.
Since most fight fans respond to aggression regardless of the
weight class or gender, Kaufman’s powerbomb-style slam KO against
Roxanne
Modafferi in July might be an indication she’s prepared to
perform at the level needed to maintain interest in a post-Carano
division.

Is Thomson going to hold up in MMA?

Following an impressive 4-1 stint in 2006, Thomson has seen his
fight frequency slow to a crawl: two fights in 2007 and 2008, and
only one each in ’09 and ’10.

A broken ankle hobbled him early; two broken ribs in June didn’t do
him any favors. When he’s on, Thomson -- a huge lightweight -- has
some of the better wrestling in the division. When he’s off,
injuries shave minutes off his cardio output and he can become a
sitting duck.

Red Ink: Diaz vs. Noons
II

It happens that most fights “guaranteed” by media or promoters to
be exciting usually ignore the self-awareness of the fighters
themselves: since they know the other guy is running on octane,
they slow things down and treat the mat like a minefield, stepping
cautiously.

It’s that past experience that has put me off of getting too
enthusiastic about pre-booked “wars,” but in the case of Diaz and
Noons, it might be worth another try. Diaz doesn’t play like he
values his face; Noons has deserved confidence in his hands;
neither man seems to have any particular interest in going to the
ground to catch a break.

Diaz’s biggest complaint in their first bout -- largely a rout for
Noons -- is that the ringside physician didn’t give more leniency
to his bleeding forehead. While that may sound like sour grapes, it
makes some degree of sense: Diaz’s volume style relies heavily on
his marathoner’s heart, and it’s allowed him to turn up the heat
when opponents begin to slow down. (He got bashed against Takanori
Gomi, only to choke him in round two.) He’s also not being
forced to suck in 10 pounds to make an aberration of a 160-pound
class this time. Of the two, it’s Diaz who should look
substantially different on fight night.

What It Means: For Diaz, a chance to erase the most annoying
blemish on his record next to a No Contest for alleged weed
inhalation; for Noons, the opportunity to stake his reputation as
Diaz’s Kryptonite -- but what is the 155 pound Noons going to do
with a welterweight title?

Wild Card: This is Noons’ first trip to 170. Will the gym
discipline involved in cutting weight lapse, and will Diaz’s extra
size be a problem?

Who Wins: Next to Velasquez/Lesnar, this is October’s most
divisive main event fight. Noons might score early, but Diaz has
been clipped before (Gomi, Marius
Zaromskis) only to come back with a bad attitude. I like Diaz
in any fight not involving someone trying to hold him down. Diaz by
decision.